The book is usally found in the cultural studies section of the bookstore.
Here it was found on the third floor of Chapters bookstore,
on Bloor Street, in Toronto. (Fullsize pictures taken from within
Chapters bookstore can be found here.)
Price, from Chapters (chapters.com) is $34.95

Published October 2001 by Randomhouse Doubleday (Randomhouse and
Doubleday have now merged).

cyborg, n. a person whose physiological functioning is aided by or
dependent upon a mechanical or electronic device.
Steve Mann is a cyborg, and the inventor of the wearable computer,
called the WearComp. He sees the world as images imprinted onto his
retina by rays of laser light. This allows him to transmit his
viewpoint live to the Internet, block out billboards and other
unwanted visual stimuli, and turn his world into a series of
hyperlinks. Constantly connected to the WearComp system, Mann has all
the capabilities of a standard office at his disposal, even as he
utilizes shrinking technologies to turn himself into a portable movie
studio. The first person to live in total constant intimate contact
with the computer, Steve Mann exists at once in the real and virtual
worlds, living an entirely videographic existence, seeing everything
around him, including himself, through a wearable computer.
Over the past twenty years, Steve Mann has been his own human guinea
pig, testing his various wearable computer prototypes on himself. In
Cyborg, he uses his own unique experiences to assess the state of
wearable computers and their potential impact on our lives,
articulating a vision for a tomorrow that sees humanity freer, safer,
and smarter in ways most of us can only imagine.
Mann is fascinated by the possibilities of the cyborg future, but he
does not shrink away from frankly discussing the dangers of a
post-human age in which our computers come to control us. In this
unique ground-breaking book, Mann charts the development of a wearable
computer industry, and warns of dangers to our liberty, privacy, and
democracy. He contrasts those dangers with his own sweeping inclusive
vision of a wearable computing age that brings about new ways to
teach, learn, make art, communicate, and even think.
Part biography, part breath-taking manifesto, part startling look into
the very near future, Cyborg is a powerful book that challenges
preconceptions and invites readers to enter the mind of one of the
most fascinating thinkers of our time.